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About
About This Project
The Federal Election Interference Risk Map tracks actions by the federal executive branch that target state election infrastructure, voter data, and election officials ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
It was created in February 2026 because the events unfolding — DOJ lawsuits against 24 states for voter data, the FBI raid on Georgia election offices, the dismantling of CISA — are happening fast and across many states simultaneously. It's hard to see the full picture without seeing it all in one place.
Guiding Principles
Facts over predictions
Every risk level is based on actions that have already occurred and are publicly documented. We don't speculate about what might happen next.
Sources you can verify
Every claim links back to primary reporting — the Brennan Center, DOJ press releases, court filings, and major news organizations. If we can't source it, we don't include it.
Bipartisan framing
Republican officials like Brad Raffensperger (GA) and the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission are fighting these same federal actions. This map documents what the federal government is doing to states, regardless of those states' partisan lean.
Action-oriented
Awareness without action doesn't help. Every state detail includes links to check your voter registration, find your legislators, and support legal defense efforts.
How You Can Help
Share it
The more people who understand what's happening across all 50 states, the harder it is to normalize. Use the share buttons on the main page.
Use the data
Journalists, researchers, and civic organizations are welcome to reference this map. Please link back to the source and verify claims independently.
Stay informed
This map will be updated as events develop. Bookmark it and check back — things are moving fast.
Technical Details
This site is a single static HTML page with no tracking, no cookies, no analytics, and no third-party scripts beyond Google Fonts. It loads fast, works offline once cached, and doesn't collect any user data. The source data is embedded directly in the page for transparency and inspectability.